The Next Bill Kauffman Book

Coming from ISI Books in September: Forgotten Founder, Drunken Prophet: The Life of Luther Martin. Martin, a Maryland delegate to and “the bitterest states’ rightser at the [Constitutional] Convention,” was a great Anti-Federalist whose detestation of Thomas Jefferson drove him, ironically enough, into the Federalist Party. I’ve just had a glance at the galleys of Kauffman’s book so far, which looks to be every bit as good as you’d expect. A sneak preview:

Martin understood quite clearly that the Constitution was a counterrevolution, recentralizing that which had been decentralized upon the assertion of American independence. ‘Men love power,’ Hamilton told the convention. To Hamilton this was a simple statement of fact, not at all deplorable. The Anti-Federalists had their doubts about its accuracy–did not men love their families, their homeplaces, their liberties even more?–but in the event, they desird not to channel this powerlust toward profitable ends but rather to block those avenues down which power is pursued. If it is true that men love to wield power over other men and that a centralized state will attract such warped creatures, then rather than design a Rube Goldberg scheme by which the will to dominate is transmuted into gold for the commonweal, why not just not construct a centralized state? Remove the means of gratifying the temptation.

You can find an earlier piece Bill wrote on Luther Martin here.

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2 Comments on “The Next Bill Kauffman Book”

  1. Dylan Waco Says:

    Saw the cover in the B&N database today. Looks great.

  2. Scott Lahti Says:

    Here I was all set to launch into a Reformation joke about Luther Martin - with an optional sidebar jest on MLK, Jr. - when what did the link to Bill’s piece five years ago in TAE deliver? Another installment of “Great Minds Think Alike [and so do we]“…

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